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Our Mission
To present libertarianism, The Libertarian Party and its Candidates to the
GLBTQ community.
To monitor the Libertarian Party's continuing support for Equal Rights for
everyone including GLBTQ individuals.
To support each other in this work.
Our Name
- From the dictionary: Outright 1. Without reservation or qualification;
openly.
While our members are "out" as members of the LGBTQ community,
we are definitely NOT on the "right" of the political spectrum.
Outright (capital O, lowercase r) is all one word.
As some libertarians are fond of saying, "We are neither Left nor Right, but Up." To find
out what this means, take the World's Smallest Political Quiz at the Advocates for Self Government website.
2006-07 Officers of Outright Libertarians USA
Chair - Rob Power
-San Francisco, CA- Born and raised in Nashville, Rob Power attended the
University of Tennessee, where he was President of the Lambda Student Union and
Chair of the Gay and Straight Political network, which sought to add sexual
orientation and gender identity to the University's official nondiscrimination
policy (sadly, a policy still to this day not in place, many years after Rob finished his MS/MBA at UT).
While working as the Director of Engineering for a
dot-com in Oakland, California, Rob became Vice-Chair of the Libertarian
Party of San Francisco and founded our organization's first West Coast chapter,
Outright Libertarians of the San Francisco Bay Area, and served as the chapter's
first Chair.
He was elected Chair of Outright Libertarians USA at
the 2004 annual meeting, concurrent with the Libertarian Party Presidential
Nominating Convention in Atlanta. While living in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, he legally married his husband in 2007, and moved back to San Francisco later the same year.
Vice-Chair - Ruth Bennett
-Seattle, WA- A Libertarian since she cast her vote for Roger McBride and David Bergland in the 1976 Presidential race, Ruth Bennett has been State Chair of the Libertarian Parties of Colorado and Washington, a Regional Representative and an At-Large member of the Libertarian National Committee, and ran the Libertarian National Conventions of 1981 and 1987. Ruth lives in Seattle and in 2004 ran for Governor of Washington, receiving 63,465 votes, more than 450 times the 139 votes separating the new Governor Christine Gregoire and her Republican opponent Dino Rossi.
Secretary - Rich Newell
-Walnut Creek, CA- Originally from the mid-west, Rich joined the Libertarian Party in Iowa where he ran for State Senate in 1980. After moving to California he ran for Congress in 1982. Currently he is an At-Large Representative on the LP of California Executive Committee where he is also the Media Relations committee chair.
Rich joined Outright Libertarians of the San Francisco Bay Area during Rob Power's tenure as chair, and was quickly elected vice-chair of the chapter. A year later he became chair of the local chapter and vice-chair of the national organization.
In his private life, Rich is an electrical engineer. He married his husband of 20 years during the Valentine's weekend rush at San Francisco city hall in 2004, only to have the marriage anulled by the state supreme court later that year.
Treasurer - Beau Cain
-Santa Clara, CA- Beau Cain is an adventurous military brat who was born in Panama and who
has lived, was schooled, and has worked in several U.S. states, Germany,
and the Philippines. His early career as a hotel auditor plus his
experience incorporating and running non-profit organizations enhances his
ability to manage Outright Libertarians' finances.
His more recent careers
as a technical writer and college teacher, author, and traveling lecturer
increasingly involve him in non-profit leadership. He currently serves as
a Director on the Board of an international non-profit organization.
Currently, Beau lives in California's Silicon Valley and works as a
writing consultant and teacher at San Jose State University's
Professional Development Center and at San Jose City College's Institute
for Business Performance, and has taught undergraduate courses at
University of San Francisco.
State Chair - California: Brian Miller
State Coordinator - Georgia: Doyle Jones
State Chair (provisional chapter) - Tennessee: Allan Wallace
- I'm a gay (GLBT)
libertarian, what does Outright have for me?
As lone LP Activists, most of us had to be satisfied with being the
lone libertarian voice in gay community meetings, in letters to the
editor, and sometimes the lone gay voice in LP meetings where subjects
that affect us were discussed. Outright provides a way to identify GLBT
and straight LP allies, it provides systems of help when dealing with the
political powers that be in our community, and it provides encouragement
and camaraderie that can help keep burn-out at bay.
- I'm a straight
libertarian, what does Outright have for me?
At least 10% of all adults are homosexual, bisexual, transgendered or
are straight but their sexual activities place them outside of what is
considered "normal". Chances are very good that if you don't
fall into one of these categories yourself, that you have friends and
family who do. Outright is here as a resource to you, to help you
identify the issues important to people in these communities and to help
you reach out to them as a libertarian. If reaching out beyond family and
friends in the cause of liberty to people who love differently is
something you want to do, you too have a home at Outright.
- I'm a Libertarian
Party candidate, what can Outright do for me and my campaign?
We can advise you on how libertarian principles apply to issues of
importance to the GLBT communities and how best to present the
libertarian message to our community. We can advise you on how to
interact with the liberal Gay Press and if we have a chapter or
member/activists near you, we may even be able to set up interviews for
you.
- I agree
with the LP on all but two issues, am I a Libertarian?
It would depend on what the two issues are and how important they
each are to you. If one of the two issues is the "Non-Initiation of
Force" principle (i.e. you prefer the US to strike its enemies down
BEFORE they actually do something against us) then you are probably not a
libertarian. If you disagree with us about some lesser issue but that
issue happens to be a pivotal issue for you, then you probably won't want
to vote for very many libertarian candidates. But consider this; if you
only disagreed with the Democratic Party on two issues, would you hesitate
to call yourself a Democrat?
- I like LP candidates but I don't want to waste my vote. Why should I
vote Libertarian?
Exercising your right to vote is NEVER a waste, regardless of who you
cast your ballot for. Many of us got tired of voting for evil by
voting for the lesser evil and started voting our conscience. We agreed
with the libertarians most often, so we started voting for their
candidates. And because it takes fewer libertarian votes to make an
impression on a winning major party candidate, it could be said that a
libertarian vote counts for more.
Also See: The Article,
"The Wasted Vote Syndrome"
- Is
Outright part of the Libertarian Party?
Many of our members are also members of the Libertarian Party and we
require our Officers to maintain LP membership, but other than this we
have no direct link with the party. We are an activists' organization
that promotes the party and its candidates, but we are a separate
organization.
- Does Outright's positions on "gay issues" differ from the
Libertarian Party?
In substance, no. Currently, every one of our positions are
consistent with libertarian principle and the Libertarian Party Platform
(Neither Log Cabin Republicans nor even Stonewall Democrats can say
this). However, we and the LP do sometimes disagree on the approach.
For example: The LP takes a hard line on Hate Crimes Legislation, as
legalized discrimination against the victims of some violent crimes in
favor of others. Outright opposes Hate Crimes Legislation but
understands, sometimes first hand, why it is so popular and seeks to show
GLBT people that the legislation is not only discriminatory but flawed
even when it actually includes us! The LP's approach is
often hard hitting and direct to the central issue. Outright's approach
is more understanding, we are more willing to explain the failings of
government solutions and to show how some things that look good for us on
the surface may actually work against us. But one thing to keep in mind:
the national LP has never taken a negative stance on the inclusion of GLBT individuals
in any legislation that secures equal rights for GLBT people, whether marriage, military service, taxation, etc.
- How can you claim that the LP is a good party for gay people when
it is against Affirmative Action and Hate Crimes Legislation?
The Libertarian Party's problem with both of these issues, is the
fact that both seek to cure discrimination among the citizens of the US
with government discrimination backed by the force and might of
government employees with guns. Libertarians have no problem with the
goals of either Affirmative Action or Hate Crimes Legislation, but
their implementation causes more problems than they solve.
There is no question that both of these issues carry with it an
overabundance of emotions on all sides. But the attitudes and
emotionalism behind the push for Hate Crimes Legislation and Affirmative
Action only serves to degrade Anti-Bigotry to the point of becoming its
own kind of Bigotry (a "I'm bigoted against bigoted people"
mentality). Political opportunists in and out of our community are quick
to take advantage of this form of Bigotry. As intelligent, rational people,
we should not fall for such tricks.
- Why is the LP and Outright against government funding of AIDS research
and service agencies?
The answer to this is very closely tied to the fact of government
over-taxation and of government bureaucratic waste.
FACT: Any time middle-men are added into any transaction, prices go up.
The more middle-men involved the higher prices go.
FACT: According to the government's own GAO reports between 60% and 80%
of every dollar given to ANY department or agency of the federal
government goes to pay for its overhead, salaries, and all the other
expenses of its existence. Only an average of about 30% of each dollar
actually gets used for the purpose stated.
FACT: We are a generous community. It has been proven time and time again
that we give to projects and causes we are concerned about.
Think about this:
If you want to give one dollar to AIDS research, which way is better? OR,
which way benefits the research more?
1 - through taxation -- only 20 or 40 cents goes to fund research after
the government takes its cut.
2 - through United Way -- about 60 cents goes to fund research after UW
and the middleman charity takes their cuts.
3 - through a charity funding research -- about 80 cents goes to the
research.
4 - directly to the research institution -- close to 100 percent goes to
fund research.
No One Wastes More than the federal government!
- How do I join Outright?
To join through this website,
Click Here!
- How do I start an
Outright chapter?
Click Here!
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